Unit 8: Recruitment, Selection and Training for
Employees
Why do businesses recruit?
To replace staff who have left or been promoted
Bring in staff with new skills
Recruit more staff as business expands
Job Analysis – Identifies and record the responsibilities and tasks relating to a job
Job Description – Outlines the responsibilities and duties to be carried out by an employee
to do a specific job
Given to the applicants for the job so they know what the job entails
Allow a job specification to be drawn up, so that people with the right skills will be
employed
Can show whether they are doing the job effectively (once they are employed)
Job Specifications – A document which outlines the requirements, qualifications, expertise,
physical characteristics for a specific job
Educational qualifications
Amount & type of experience
Personality
Difference between internal and external recruitment
Internal Recruitment – when a vacancy is filled by someone who is an existing employee of
the business
Advantages
Saves time and money – Don’t need to spend money on advertising the job
vacancy
The person is already known to the business (reliability, ability, potential)
Motivates other workers (chance for them to get promoted -> work harder)
Disadvantages
May not bring in new ideas
Promoting an employee may make other employees jealous and demotivated
Quality of internal candidates might be low
External Recruitment – when a vacancy is filled by someone who is not an existing
employee
Advantages
New ideas & skills
Worker with higher qualification
Disadvantages
High training cost
Takes longer time to recruit
Expensive – need to advertise job
Recruiting channels
Internal
Noticeboards
Company Newspaper
External
Local newspaper
National newspaper
Specialist magazines
Online recruitment sites
Recruitment agencies
Job centres
Methods of applications
Application forms/letters and CVs – To see if applicant matches the job specification
Methods of selection
Interviews – Find out information about candidate’s abilities and personal qualities
Purpose of interview
1. Find out if applicant has the ability to do the job
2. Personal qualities about the applicant
3. To see if the candidate will ‘fit in’ with the culture of the business
Testing – Applicants may be required to undertake tests to check their ability to carry out
certain tasks.
Type of tests
1. Skill test – to observe the candidate’s skills
2. Aptitude test – to see how quickly candidate can learn new skills
3. Personality test – to see if their personality has the characteristic that the job may
require
4. Group situation test – to see how candidate(s) works as a team
Part-time- Between 1 and 30-35 hours a week
Advantages
Easier to ask employees to just work at busy times
Flexible working hours
Less expensive than hiring full-time employees
Easier to make part-time workers redundant
Disadvantages
Workers are less likely to seek training (because their job is temporary)
Less committed to the business (temporary job)
More difficult to communicate with part-time workers when they are not at work
Less likely to get promoted
Takes longer to recruit 2 part time workers than 1 full time workers
The importance of training and the methods of training
Why train employees?
Introduce new process/equipment
Improve efficiency of workforce
Train unskilled workers more valuable to the company
Decrease supervision
Decrease accidents
Induction training – Introduction given to a new employee explaining the business’s
activities and procedures and introducing them to other employees.
Advantages
Helps new employee settle in
Health and safety training may be required
Less likely to make mistakes
Disadvantages
Time consuming (delays the start of employee’s work)
Wages are paid but no work has been done by the employee
On the job training – Watching an experienced worker doing the job.
Advantages
Training is cheap (travel cost expensive)
Training is specific for their job
Work can be done while training
Disadvantages
Not be as productive as usual cos they are showing what to do
Bad habits from the trainer may pass to trainee
Off the job training – Train at different place from work (usually by specialist trainer)
Advantages
Broad range of skills taught by expert trainers
Cheaper for the business cos employee still carry out normal duties (training is
after work)
Disadvantages
High cost
Wages are paid but no work is being done by the worker
Additional qualifications leave and find another job
Why reducing the size of the workforce might be necessary
Workforce planning – is where a business decides on the number and skills of employees
needed in the future
Why might a business need to reduce the number of employees?
automation (machines replace humans)
factory/shop closure
business relocating
demand for goods/services falling
business merging
falling demand for their goods & services
Dismissal – employment ended against employees will for not working in accordance with
employment contract
Redundancy – when an employee is no longer needed and so losses their job, but not due
the any aspect of their work being unsatisfactory.
How to decide who is made redundant?
Some workers may volunteer because they might have planned to leave anyways.
Length of time employed (employees who have worked there for a long time can
stay)
Workers with essential/transferrable skills remain
Worker’s employment history (e.g., attendance, punctuality, appraisal record)
Legal controls over employment issues and their impact on
employers and employees
Most countries have laws to ensure that employees are treated equally
Business must be careful when advertising job and while selecting applicants to
make sure they are all treated fairly/equally (e.g., Gender / race)
Employment issues affected by legal controls:
Discrimination
Legal minimum wage
Health and safety
Unfair dismissal
Employment contracts
The contract of employment – legal agreement between an employer and
employee, listing the rights and responsibilities of workers.
Impact of employment contracts on employer and employee
Both employee and employer know what is expected of them
Provides security of employment
Legal dismissal allowed
Can seek legally binding compensation
Unfair Dismissal
Industrial tribunal – a type of law court that makes judgement on disagreements between
companies and their employees.
Impact of unfair dismissal on employer and employee
Must keep very accurate records of a worker’s performance (if want to dismiss them)
Security of employment
Can take their employer to an industrial tribunal if they feel unfairly treated & get
compensation
Protection against discrimination
When the employer makes decisions that are based on unfair reasons.
1. Different race or colour
2. Different region
3. Opposite sex
4. Considered too old/young
5. Disabled in some way
Health and safety at work
1. Protect workers from dangerous machinery
2. Provide safety equipment and clothing
3. Maintain reasonable workplace temperatures
4. Provide hygienic conditions and washing facilities
5. Don’t insist excessively long shifts and provide breaks
Impact of unfair dismissal on employer and employee
Cost to employer of meeting the health and safety regulations
Time to train workers in precautions
Workers feel safer & more motivated
Reduces accidents rate
Ethical decision – A decision taken by a manager or a company because of the moral code
observed by the firm
Legal minimum wage
There should be a contract of employment which contain details of:
The wage rate to be paid
How frequently wages will be paid
What deductions will be made from wages
Impact of legal minimum wage on employer and employee
Prevent strong employers from exploiting unskilled workers
Encourage employers to train them
Encourage more people to seek work (fewer shortage of workers)
Low paid workers will have higher living standards
Increase business cost increase prices
Unemployment rise (cannot afford wage rates)
Unit 9: Internal and external communication
Communication – Transferring of a message from the sender to the receiver, who
understands the message.
Internal communication
Internal communication is between members of the same organisation
e.g., Employees talking to each other, Director sending an email to employees, Noticeboard
in office.
Poor internal communication leads to –
Workers don’t understand what they have to do
Poor motivation
Wastage (e.g., 2 employees do the wrong task because of wrong instructions)
External communication is between the organisation and other organisation or individuals
e.g., Employees talking to customers, Ordering goods from suppliers, Advertisements
Poor external communication leads to –
Unhappy customers (leads to fewer sales)
Bad business reputation (lower sales)
Problems with suppliers/customers due to incorrect information (e.g., wrong
supplies being delivered)
The process of effective communication
A transmitter or a sender of the message is the person starting of the process by
sending the message
A medium of communication is the method used to send a message e.g., letter
written communication, meeting verbal communication
A receiver is the person who receives the message
Feedback is the reply from the receiver (arrived/understood/acted upon)
One-way & two-way communication
One way communication – message which does not allow/require a response
Two-way communication – is when the receiver responds to the message (may have a
discussion)
Advantages of two-way communications
Receiver can tell the sender that they have understood the information/instruction
Chance to ask for more information
Allows the receiver to contribute ideas (motivate)
Communication methods
Verbal
Visual
Written
Verbal (oral) communication
Discussions
Telephone calls
Meetings
Advantages of verbal comm
Fast
Opportunity for receiver to reply (2-way comm)
Body language
Disadvantages of verbal comm
Feedback from receiver slows process down
No permanent record of the discussion
Written communication
Emails
Reports
Newsletters
Notices
Advantages of written comm
permanent record of message (reduce disagreements)
May be required by law (e.g., legal information or safety notices)
Can be easily sent to many people (e.g., emails to all employees)
Disadvantages of written comm
Readers may find long letters boring and hard to read
No feedback from receiver unless they reply
No body language
Visual communication
Posters
Images
Videos
Graphs / Charts / Diagrams
Advantages of visual communication
Interesting (Readers may pay more attention to posters / videos than boring
letters)
Information can be clearer than other methods (e.g., Video instructions can be
clearer than letter instructions)
Disadvantages of visual communication
No feedback
Some people may find charts / graphs difficult to read
Formal communication – when messages are sent through established channels using
professional language
Informal language – when info is sent and received casually using everyday language
How communication barriers arise and how to reduce or remove
them
Communication barriers – factors that stop effective communication of messages
Solutions:
The sender
Ensure message is understandable/ avoid technical terms
Ask for feedback
Make sure the right person is receiving the right message
As brief as possible to allow main points to be understood
The medium
Ask for feedback (no feedback = message was lost)
Use shortest channel
Other form of communication should be made possible
The receiver
Ask for feedback
Use a sender who is trusted by the receiver
Unit 10: Marketing, competition and the customer
The Marketing department
Marketing – identifying customer wants and satisfying them profitably
Customer – a person, business or other organisation which buys goods or services from a
business
The Sales team
The Market Research section: can help to make decision about development of new
products, pricing levels, sales & promotion strategies
The Promotion section: organising the advertising for products, decides on the types of
promotion
Distribution: Transports the products
The role of marketing
Identify and satisfy consumer needs
Keep customers loyal
Gather information about customers
Anticipate changes in customer needs
Customer loyalty – when existing customers keep buying products from the same business
Customer relationships – communicating with customers to encourage them to become
loyal
If marketing department is successful, the business can:
Develop new/improve existing products
Increase/maintain market share
Increase revenue
Improve/maintain the image of products or a business
Target a new market/market segment
Raise customer awareness
Market share – the percentage of total market sales held by one brand or a business
Understanding market changes
Why do consumer spending patterns change
Consumer taste and fashion change
New technology being developed
Changes in incomes
Ageing population
Fail to respond to customer needs = Business fail
Why have some markets become more competitive?
Globalisation – Businesses can sell their products worldwide
Better transportation allows products to be distributed all over the world
Internet e-commerce (online shopping) allows customers to purchase goods from
around the world
How can businesses respond to increased competition?
1. Maintain good customer relationships
2. Keep improving existing product(s)
3. Keep costs low to maintain competitiveness
4. Bring out new products to keep customers’ interest
Mass marketing
Mass market – where there is a very large number of sales
Advantages of mass marketing
High sales and demands (higher number of consumers) which may lead to high profits
o Opportunities for growth
Benefit from economies of scale
Risk can be spread (if one variety of product fails, the other may still sell well)
Disadvantages of mass marketing
Higher competition
Product is aimed at the whole market so specific customer needs are not met
High advertising cost
Niche Marketing
Niche Marketing – a small specialised segment of a larger market
Advantages of niche marketing
Small businesses can avoid competition from larger businesses
Needs of consumers are can me more targeted good loyalty & relations
Disadvantages of niche marketing
Smaller number of consumer so growth is difficult
Risks are not spread so if demand for the specialised product falls, the business will
likely fail unless they develop more products
Market segments
Market segment – identifiable sub-group of a whole market in which consumers have
similar characteristics or preferences
Segmenting a market can help a business to:
Make marketing expenditure cost effective
Enjoy higher sales and profits
Identify a segment which is not having their needs fully met
Ways that businesses can segment a market:
Gender
Age
Income
Location
Lifestyle
Use of the product (e.g., for personal use, business use)
Which method of segmentation should be used?
Detailed analysis of the market and the size of each potential segment
Company and brand image
Cost of entering each market segment
Unit 11: Market Research
Market research – process of gathering, analysing and interpreting information about a
market
The role of market research
The role of market research is to answer these questions:
Willing to buy my product?
Price prepared to pay?
Where do they be most likely to buy?
What features do they like/dislike
What type of customer?
What type of promotion would be effective?
Who & how strong are the main competing business?
Product-orientated and market-orientated businesses
Product-orientated business – one whose main focus of activity is on the product itself
Basic necessities for living (e.g., agricultural tools or fresh foods)
No brand names
General products that consumers need to buy
Mainly concerned with price & quality
Market orientated business – one which carries out market research to find out consumer
wants before a product is developed and produced
Better able to survive because more adaptable to changes in customers tastes
Able to take advantage of new market opportunities
Marketing budget – a financial plan for the marketing of a product or product range for
some specified period of time
Market research methods
Quantitative info (quantity of something)
Qualitative info (opinion/judgement)
Both type of info can be gathered as a result of:
Primary research
Primary research – Collection of original data by directly contacting with potential or
existing customers
Up to date and relevant
It is first-hand
Most effective to gather info to help with a specific problem
Not available to other businesses
Expensive
Not available immediately
Methods of primary research
Questionnaires – a set of questions to be answered
Detailed qualitative information can be gathered
Take a lot of time and money.
Online surveys – require the target sample to answer questions over the internet
Quick, easy, and cheap
Some people will take advantage to gain any incentives (not honest/careless)
Focus group - a group of people who a representative of the market
Provide detailed information about consumers’ tastes and preferences.
Discussion could be biased (influenced by others)
Interviews – asking individuals a series of questions face-to-face or over the
phone
The interviewer is able to explain any questions that the interviewee does
not understand.
Expensive and time-consuming
Sample – group of people selected to respond to market research questions such as
questionnaire
Random sample – when people are selected at random as a source of info
Quota sample – People are selected based on certain characteristics (e.g., age, income)
Secondary research
Secondary research – uses info that has already been collected and is available for
use by others
Advantages
Cheaper and quicker than primary research
can be used to help assess the total size of a market by finding out the size of
the population and its age structure
Newspapers may carry vital economic forecasts
Disadvantages
Data may be out of date
Data is available to all businesses
Data may not be completely relevant (not with one business in mind)
Internal sources Trade and employer
associations
Existing pricing data Internet
Finance department Research reports
Customer records Newspapers
Sales records Media reports
Sales employees Market research agencies’
reports
Government reports and
External sources statistics
Factors influencing the accuracy of market research data
Sample selected (quota sample is more accurate than random sample)
Size of samples
Secondary research information can be outdated
Bias
Wording of the questions
Presentation of data from market research
Market research results can be presented in ways such as
Tables or tally chart
Line graphs
Diagram
Pie & bar chart
Unit 12: The marketing mix: product
The marketing mixes
Marketing mix - a term which is used to describe all the activities which go into marketing
products
Four Ps of the marketing mix:
Product: main features, design, packaging
Price: high/low, competitors’ price
Place: how and where will the product be sold to customers
Promotion: how will potential customers know about it
Types of products
1. Consumer goods – goods bought by consumers for their own use (e.g., food, cleaning
materials, furniture, computers)
2. Consumer services – services bought by consumers for their own use (e.g., repairing,
hairdressing, education)
3. Producer goods – goods produced for other businesses to use (e.g., machines, raw
materials)
4. Producer services – services produced for other businesses (e.g., accounting,
insurance)
What makes a product successful?
Satisfies consumer needs and wants
Low production cost to make profit
Performance, reliability, quality of the product that is kept consistent with the
product image
First business to produce new products/introduce new changes
Unique
Product development
1. Generate ideas
2. Select best ideas for further research
3. Decide if the company can sell enough
4. Develop prototype
5. Launch in one area to test the market
6. Full launch
The costs and benefits of developing new products
Unique selling point – the special feature of a product that differentiates if from the
products of competitors
Diversification, giving a broader range of products to sell
It allows the business to expand into new/existing markets
Costs of carrying out market research
Costs of producing trial products also costs of wasted materials
Lack of sales if the target market is wrong
The loss of company image if failed
Brand image
Brand name – Unique name of a product that makes it different from other brands
Advertising makes consumer aware of the quality of the product and persuades them into
buying the product
Brand loyalty – When customers continue buying from the same brand instead of the
competitors
Brand image – an image or identity given to a product and makes it different from other
brands
Roles of packaging
Protection
Protects the product
Easy for transportation
Allows the product to be used easily
Suitable for the product
Promotes the product
Attractive and appealing to customers
Promotes the brand image e.g., expensive - luxurious looking, gold colour / low cost –
basic simple, plain colours)
The product life cycle
1. Development – Prototype is tested and market research carried out. There are no
sales at this time.
2. Introduction – Product is launched onto the market. Sales grow slowly. Informative
advertising is used until the product becomes known. No profit as development cost
haven’t been covered
3. Growth – Sales are growing rapidly. Persuasive advertising is used. Prices are
reduced as competitors introduce their product to the market. Profits made.
4. Maturity – Sales of the product increases slowly, there is intense competition. Pricing
strategies such as competitive or promotional pricing are being used to compete with
competitors. Profits at highest.
5. Saturation – Sales have reached its highest point. Growth has stopped. Prices are
reduced to be competitive. High and stable advertising.
6. Decline – Sales of the product has started to fall, Eventually, the product will be
taken out of the market.
Extending the product life cycle
Introduce new variations of the original product/improved versions of the old
product
Sell the product into new markets (e.g., distribute to other countries)
Use new advertising campaigns
Sell through additional, different retail outlets
Make changes to the product’s design, colour or packaging